Tag Archives: exercise

Can You Really Walk Yourself Fit With 10000 Steps?

by Ellen Williams, M.D.

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

When I was still viewing middle age as something on the horizon, I looked down on people who thought walking was “exercise” with 100% Grade A disdain. There’s no way you could really walk yourself fit. Right?

I mean walking was for underachieving lazy people. Why walk for an hour and get only one mile, maybe two, when you could run for twenty-five minutes and travel 5K? Oh, I was never a speedy runner, but I was fast enough to justify my tortoise and the hare snobbery . . . at least in my mind.

But my knee and the pop heard ’round the block changed all that.

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

My knee in all of its swollen glory. My daughter thought it looked like a Cabbage Patch Doll. So she added eyes. Because laughing hysterically at my pain is the same as an “I love you”, right?!

Something in my knee gave out–while walking, I might add– and intractable pain ensued, which led to arthroscopic surgery being scheduled. Not to brag, but when I woke up from anesthesia my surgeon ever so gently told me that I have the knee of a seventy-year-old woman. Why yes, I was upset.

And thus began the blossoming romance between my booty and the chair.

During my seven week recovery period, Booty and Chair really became an item. They had flirted on and off leading up to the surgery, but the bond was cemented when Crutches formally introduced them.

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Should I have realized that Booty and Chair were no good for each other? That they were on a collision course headed for mom jeans and muffin tops? Sure, in normal times, but I was pouting about how awful it was that I could no longer run. Why bother moving at all if I couldn’t move in the most efficient, hard-as-nails way possible? “No pain, no gain” was the battle cry in the 80s and I was nothing if not a child of those times.

So what did my attitude get me? Fat. It got me fat. By the end of the year, I was fifteen pounds heavier than I had ever been when I was pregnant. If I had been stupid enough to try, my old maternity clothes would not have fit me. Take a moment of silence for that soul-sucking sadness.

Something had to change and that something was getting a Fitbit Zip, joining a fitness support group, and logging back into My Fitness Pal to track my calories.

Guess what I learned? I was eating too much and moving too little. Who knew my middle-aged metabolism couldn’t burn through nachos and cookies every night?

That first day, I clipped on my Fitbit Zip sure that I would hit the magic 10000 steps because I knew I was an active person. Um, I hit about 3000.

So did I jump on my treadmill to rectify the situation? No! I turned to the internet to see if this whole 10000 step thing was bogus. And the answer was a retroactive, “it’s legit!”

While the 10000 step concept was originally thrown out there in the 1960s by a Japanese company to sell pedometers (Aha! I knew it was a lie!), American scientists have since performed the research and determined that 10000 steps per day is a pretty good indicator of an active lifestyle. (Science to the rescue!)

In the scientific paper, Steps to Better Cardiovascular Health: How Many Steps Does It Take to Achieve Good Health and How Confident Are We in This Number?, Catrine Tudor-Locke outlines different levels of activity.

Activity Level Defined by Steps per Day

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms |Activity Levels Defined by Steps per Day

Ten thousand steps is a great number because unless you have a very active job like nursing or working in a warehouse, you need about 30 minutes of brisk walking in addition to your normal life steps to reach 10000.

This in turn correlates with the American Heart Association’s recommendations for overall cardiovascular health:

At least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity at least 5 days per week for a total of 150

OR

At least 25 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity at least 3 days per week for a total of 75 minutes; or a combination of moderate- and vigorous-intensity aerobic activity

AND

Moderate- to high-intensity muscle-strengthening activity at least 2 days per week for additional health benefits.

So what counts as moderate to intense walking? That would be ≥100 steps per minute. I timed myself on my treadmill and at a mere speed of 3.0, I can achieve about 125 steps per minute.

And here is some of the best news! You don’t even have to tackle the 30 minutes all at once! Ten minute bursts of activity at a time achieves the same fitness results.

So to recap, walking is good enough and humans are lazy liars who are fantastic at deluding themselves about how active they are. Or at least I am. I don’t know if you were playing along at home, but I was only hitting 3000 steps before my fitness revelation. I WAS A SEDENTARY SLOTH! While sloths are adorable, carrying thirty extra pounds is not. I needed to change.

My Three Point Fitness Plan:

1. Accountability

If you are gaining weight, the truth is you are eating too much and the only way to get to the bottom of it is to keep a food diary. I logged into My Fitness Pal (MFP) app for the first time since 2009 to track my food. It has improved so much! You can easily find calorie counts for Weight Watcher and Skinnytaste recipes and you can scan the barcode of packaged foods.

I bought a Fitbit Zip. You can check out why Erin and I picked the Zip here. Fitbit and MFP work wonderfully together to track your energy in versus energy out. MFP will even calculate how many calories you burned from active exercise logged on your Fitbit and figure those into your calories allowed total. Also, you can link up with friends so you can compete compare how many steps everyone is taking.

I confess failures, and celebrate successes with the ladies in my fitness support group. You can have your own. It’s as easy as gathering some friends in a secret Facebook group.

2. Moving More

I have fully embraced the American Heart Association’s mantra about exercise: Something is better than nothing!

3. Eating Less

I have invested the time in cooking healthy meals and stocking my kitchen with healthy snacks. I cannot “diet” and deprive myself, but I know how to eat nutritious, delicious foods that boost my health and keep me satisfied.

What does this look in action?

1. Exercise

For the past 30 days, I have moved 10000 steps each and EVERY day. Probably about 3000 to 5000 of these steps are achieved on the treadmill at speeds between 3.0 and 5.0 with most of them happening at 4.0, but if I can get outside, I prefer that. I have also been known to do four extra laps around the grocery store to get my steps in. If I am feeling sluggish, I convince myself  walking at 3.0 on the treadmill is better than sitting and usually by a minute into it, I feel like ramping up the speed. I subscribe to the science behind interval training. No matter how fast I am going, I usually ramp up the speed by 1.0-1.5 for about a minute at a time. If I am on the treadmill for 30 minutes, I usually interval up five or six times. I also set the incline for 1 or 2 to make sure my intensity is good enough. I would go higher, but it hurts my knee.

I also have been hula hooping with a weighted hoop every day. Talk about an effortless abdominal and glutes workout! Exercise can be fun. I am a convert! (Caveat: your ribs and hips might feel a little bruised at first, so start with about a minute of hooping. This feeling disappeared for me after about 2 days. I think consciously tightening your abs while hooping also helps.)

I have been doing low weight/high repetition arm work and Pilates style ab work (planks and push-ups are my frenemies) two or three times per week. I often do the weights while on the treadmill. I have also been doing these exercises to strengthen the muscles supporting my knees.

When I hit the inevitable plateau, I will switch up/intensify my strength training.

2. Nutrition

I have MFP set for 1.5 lb/per week weight loss. This allows me 1220 calories per day, which I admit is hard to maintain EXCEPT I really end up eating between 1300 and 1475 calories per day because of my Fitbit exercise credit. It is a bit of a mind game, but it works for me.

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

I just cannot eat “diet” food. It tastes like plastic and the portions are miniscule. I must eat food that is delicious and allows for satisfying portions. With that being said, I cannot live on salad alone either.

I have not skipped meals and I never allow myself to become ravenous. Basically, I have been eating around 350 calories each for breakfast and lunch making sure to include protein. To reach these goals, I have banished most bread, but I still eat carbs. I think carbs are delicious and get a bad rap from the haters. For dinners, I have been preparing tasty, family-pleasing options such as Skinny Mexican Casserole, Healthy French Country Crockpot Chicken, and Weight Watchers Baked Spaghetti Carbonara. I generally load up on roasted veggies and have 1/2 cup of healthy grains, too.

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

While every choice is part of the Big Picture, not every choice has to be perfect. Fitness and health has to be a lifestyle, not some “diet” to blast through.

3. Results

In thirty days, I have lost just over ten pounds (one third of the way to my goal) and several inches from my waist, booty, and arms. I have leveled down to the next size of jeans in my closet. I feel tremendously more comfortable in my own skin already. And of note, I have not felt denied. During this 30 days, I have celebrated my birthday with a wonderful weekend in Philadelphia where I ate the likes of bacon wrapped dates, empanadas, crispy Cuban pork, and salted caramel cheesecake (all in one day, yikes!). Just know on that day I walked for close to 16000 steps all over the city and I locked her down that Monday and Tuesday, eating about 1250 calories each day.

 Bottom Line

♦Adequate levels of fitness take more than a casual stroll, but they also don’t require 90 minutes of marathon running and weight lifting. Don’t let the whispers of perfectionism immobilize you- “If you aren’t working hard, what’s the point of working at all?” Just move! An object in motion tends to stay in motion and it’s surprising what you can achieve if you just take that first step. I still miss the “high” from running, but my knee appreciates walking and the ten less pounds it has to haul around.

♦Accountability is key. My overachieving self can’t help but beat the 10000 step goal each and every day on my FItbit. Plus, since I can link up with my friends, THEY can see if I’m reaching my goals, too. Pride, in this case, works for me.

♦If you aren’t recording your food, you are most likely eating too much. As they say in Weight Watchers, if you bite it, you write it. I weigh or measure out every portion I eat.

Now go forth and move! The road to fitness can be walked!

Can you really walk yourself fit with 10000 steps per day? | Here are the theories, the evidence and the whole pathway to a healthy lifestyle mapped out. | Health and Fitness | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

It’s Your Move!

Did you know you can earn money with your Fitbit steps?! Find our all about it here!

5 Ways to Earn Money and Rewards with Your Fitbit! It's like getting paid to exercise! | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You can check out the Fitbit Zip I use on Amazon, too.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You can purchase my hula hoop here.

Hula Hoop

The above are Amazon Affiliate links. That means that while you pay the same as you otherwise would, we get a teeny portion of the profit. Maybe enough for a tablespoon of chia seeds.
A version of this post was originally published 2/2015. 

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Check out our books, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

 

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5 Ways to Earn Money and Rewards with Your Fitbit!

Hey!

Come a little closer, we have something to tell you.

Closer.

Cloooooooosssser.

Okay. DID YOU KNOW YOU COULD EARN CASH AND REWARDS FROM LINKING YOUR FITBIT TO SOME PRETTY NIFTY APPS?

Well, you do now, plus you just got some extra steps on your tracker sidling up for the secret. You’re welcome.

Please note that many of these apps work with Jawbone and others, but since we have Fitbit Zips, we are sticking to what we know. If you really want some background on our love for our trackers read The Truth about 10,000 Steps and Your Health or listen to our podcast.

Now on with the show. Wait! You probably should take a lap to get some steps in first. Consider this your friendly reminder. We’ll wait.

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

1. AchieveMint

This one is a bit of a tease: it’s fabulous, but there is a waiting list to sign up. So, we’re telling you this one first so you can click over there and get thineself in the queue NOW.

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Why is it so great? You can make actual dollar bills from this one. Your steps earn you points towards a $50 check. On average, you earn one point per 125 steps, BUT it’s on a sliding scale so walking more earns more points per step. It takes 50,000 points to reach the payout, but hey, before you knew about this you were just walking for your health. So there’s that.

Also, if you use both Fitbit and MyFitnessPal (like we recommend), connecting them both allows you to double dip on points when you weigh in. That is much better for your waistline than a double dip of mint chocolate chip.

 

2. Pact

This one is not for the faint of heart. You are actually staking your money that you will keep your fitness goals. This one motivates with cash with the added kick of penalty. You simply make a weekly Pact to exercise more or eat healthier and set what you’ll pay other Pact members if you don’t reach it.  Do you dare??

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

3. Higi

Higi is another one that allows you to sync your Fitbit to earn points, but there’s more! You can earn extra points by stopping at a Higi Station–located in some retail pharmacies–to track your weight, BMI, pulse, and blood pressure. Higi has a handy feature to help you find one near you. Ellen has three stations that are minutes from her house at her local Giant, Rite Aid , and Acme.

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You can use points towards things like protein shakes, sunglasses, and fitness gear. You can even use points to enter to win prizes like a treadmill. But what we like most is you can use your points for charity. You can donate your points to save a pet in a shelter, buy a toy for a child battling cancer, or provide clean drinking water for a family in Haiti. You knew accumulating steps was good for your health, but who knew it could be good for the world?

4. Walgreens

If you have a Walgreens Balance Reward card, you need to connect your Fitbit to earn even more points! Simple as that. What is not simple is finding where to link your tracker. If you search for Fitbit on certain screens, it will tell you that your search results are zero. Follow this link to easily sync up. Just make sure once you get there, to click on the “Devices” tab to find the Fitbits. If you know where to go, it takes mere minutes to sign up.

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

5. FitStudio

If you shop regularly at Sears and Kmart, FitStudio is for you. The only drawback: your points generally expire after seven days. You get 5,000 points when you sign-up and sync so only do it when you’re ready to go shopping!

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

So you’re already tracking your fitness, now go forth and earn!

Need a playlist to get you groovin’? Try this one!

Happy Steps to You!

Ellen and Erin

Here are 5 easy ways to earn money and rewards with your Fitbit fitness tracker. Good health and dollar bills! Holla! - Exercise pays off! - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

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You can follow us on Google+, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Check out our books, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

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The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health

by Ellen Williams, M.D.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Read for more diet and fitness tips. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Hear my confession, oh Internet: I was a running snob. I looked down on walkers with 100% Grade A pure disdain with a heaping side of superiority. In the supermarket checkout line, I full-on “pfffted” at magazine headlines proclaiming, “Walk yourself thin.”

I mean walking was for underachieving lazy people. Why walk for an hour and get only one mile, maybe two, when you could run for twenty-five minutes and travel 5K? Oh I was never a speedy runner, but I was fast enough to justify my tortoise and the hare snobbery . . . at least in my mind.

But I have seen the light! Behold the glorious disciple who washed the scales from my McJudgy eyes: my knee!

Internet, Ellen’s knee. Ellen’s knee, Internet.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

My knee in all of its swollen glory. My daughter thought it looked like a Cabbage Patch Doll. So she added eyes. Because laughing hysterically at my pain is the same as an “I love you”, right?!

In February of 2014, something popped and intractable pain ensued; leading me to get arthroscopic surgery in April. Now before you pull on your own McJudgy pants (I’m picturing them as plaid) and scoff, “See, that is what you get for running,” just know that it was genetics more than running that got my knee.

Not to brag, but when I woke up from anesthesia my surgeon ever so gently told me that I have the knee of a seventy-year-old woman. But don’t cry for my knee, I sobbed enough for all of us.

And thus the blossoming romance between Booty and Chairbegan.

During my seven week recovery period, Booty and Chair really became an item. They had flirted on and off leading up to the surgery, but no real connection bloomed until Crutches formally introduced them.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

And here is a snapshot showcasing just how inseparable Booty and Chair became as the affair progressed.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Erin was trooper enough to chaperone the happy couple, Booty and Chair, all over the airport when we attended Mom Summit 2.0.

Should I have realized that Booty and Chair were no good for each other? That they were on a collision course headed for mom jeans and muffin tops? Sure, in normal times. But when I wasn’t lamenting, I was pouting about how awful it was that I could no longer run. Why bother moving at all if I couldn’t move in the most efficient, hard-as-nails way possible? “No pain, no gain” was the battle cry in the 80s and I was nothing if not a child of those times. Any decade that had “Where’s the beef?” AND “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!” was a decade whose catchphrases needed to be cherished.

So what did my attitude get me? Fat. It got me fat. By Christmas, I was fifteen pounds heavier than I had ever been pregnant. In a theory I will never be foolish enough to test–my old maternity clothes would not fit me. Take a moment of silence for that soul-sucking sadness.

Something had to change and that something was getting a Fitbit Zip, joining a fitness support group, and logging back into My Fitness Pal to track my calories.

Guess what I learned? I was eating too much and moving too little. Who knew my 44-year-old metabolism couldn’t burn through nachos and cookies every night?

I clipped on my Fitbit Zip sure that in the course of my day I would hit the magic 10000 steps because I knew I was an active person. Um, I hit about 3000.

So did I jump on my treadmill to rectify the situation? No! I turned to the internet to see if this whole 10000 step thing was bogus. And the answer was a retroactive, “it’s legit!”

While the 10000 step concept was originally thrown out there in the 1960s by a Japanese company to sell pedometers (Aha! I knew it was a lie!), American scientists have since performed the research and determined that 10000 steps per day is a pretty good indicator of an active lifestyle. (Science to the rescue!)

In the scientific paper, Steps to Better Cardiovascular Health: How Many Steps Does It Take to Achieve Good Health and How Confident Are We in This Number?, Catrine Tudor-Locke outlines different levels of activity.

Activity Level Defined by Steps per Day

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| Read for more diet and fitness tips.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms |Activity Levels Defined by Steps per Day

Ten thousand steps is a great number because unless you have a very active job like nursing or working in a warehouse, you need about 30 minutes of brisk walking in addition to your normal life steps to reach 10000.

This in turn correlates with the American Heart Association’s recommendations for overall cardiovascular health:

At least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity at least 5 days per week for a total of 150

OR

At least 25 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity at least 3 days per week for a total of 75 minutes; or a combination of moderate- and vigorous-intensity aerobic activity

AND

Moderate- to high-intensity muscle-strengthening activity at least 2 days per week for additional health benefits.

So what counts as moderate to intense walking? That would be ≥100 steps per minute. I timed myself on my treadmill and at a mere speed of 3.0, I can achieve about 125 steps per minute.

And here is some of the best news! You don’t even have to tackle the 30 minutes all at once! Ten minute bursts of activity at a time achieves the same fitness results.

So to recap, walking is good enough and humans are lazy liars who are fantastic at deluding themselves. Or at least I am. I don’t know if you were playing along at home, but I was only hitting 3000 steps before my fitness revelation. I WAS A SEDENTARY SLOTH! While sloths are adorable, carrying thirty extra pounds is not. I needed to change.

My Three Point Fitness Plan:

1. Accountability

If you are gaining weight, the truth is you are eating too much and the only way to get to the bottom of it is to keep a food diary. I logged into My Fitness Pal (MFP) app for the first time since 2009 to track my food. It has improved so much! You can easily find calorie counts for Weight Watcher and Skinnytaste recipes and you can scan the barcode of packaged foods.

I bought a Fitbit Zip. You can check out why Erin and I picked the Zip here. Fitbit and MFP work wonderfully together to track your energy in versus energy out. MFP will even calculate how many calories you burned from active exercise logged on your Fitbit and figure those into your calories allowed total. Also, you can link up with friends so you can compete compare how many steps everyone is taking.

I confess failures and celebrate successes with the ladies in my fitness support group. You can have your own. It’s as easy as gathering some friends in a secret Facebook group.

2. Moving More

I have fully embraced the American Heart Association’s mantra about exercise: Something is better than nothing!

3. Eating Less

I have invested the time in cooking healthy meals and stocking my kitchen with healthy snacks. I cannot “diet” and deprive myself, but I know how to eat nutritious, delicious foods that boost my health and keep me satisfied.

What does this look in action?

1. Exercise

For the past 30 days, I have moved 10000 steps each and EVERY day. Probably about 3000 to 5000 of these steps are achieved on the treadmill at speeds between 3.0 and 5.0 with most of them happening at 4.0, but if I can get outside, I prefer that. I have also been known to do four extra laps around the grocery store to get my steps in. If I am feeling sluggish, I convince myself  walking at 3.0 on the treadmill is better than sitting and usually by a minute into it, I feel like ramping up the speed. I subscribe to the science behind interval training. No matter how fast I am going, I usually ramp up the speed by 1.0-1.5 for about a minute at a time. If I am on the treadmill for 30 minutes, I usually interval up five or six times. I also set the incline for 1 or 2 to make sure my intensity is good enough. I would go higher, but it hurts my knee.

I also have been hula hooping with a weighted hoop every day. Talk about an effortless abdominal and glutes workout! Exercise can be fun. I am a convert! (Caveat: your ribs and hips might feel a little bruised at first, so start with about a minute of hooping. This feeling disappeared for me after about 2 days. I think consciously tightening your abs while hooping also helps.)

I have been doing low weight/high repetition arm work and Pilates style ab work (planks and push-ups are my frenemies) two or three times per week. I often do the weights while on the treadmill. I have also been doing these exercises to strengthen the muscles supporting my knees.

When I hit the inevitable plateau, I will switch up/intensify my strength training.

2. Nutrition

I have MFP set for 1.5 lb/per week weight loss. This allows me 1220 calories per day, which I admit is hard to maintain EXCEPT I really end up eating between 1300 and 1475 calories per day because of my Fitbit exercise credit. It is a bit of a mind game, but it works for me.

2015-02-18 15.36.23

I just cannot eat “diet” food. It tastes like plastic and the portions are miniscule. I must eat food that is delicious and allows for satisfying portions. With that being said, I cannot live on salad alone either.

I have not skipped meals and I never allow myself to become ravenous. Basically, I have been eating around 350 calories each for breakfast and lunch making sure to include protein. To reach these goals, I have banished most bread, but I still eat carbs. I think carbs are delicious and get a bad rap from the haters. For dinners, I have been preparing tasty, family-pleasing options such as Skinny Mexican Casserole, Healthy French Country Crockpot Chicken, and Weight Watchers Baked Spaghetti Carbonara. I generally load up on roasted veggies and have 1/2 cup of healthy grains, too.

My Fitness Pal Diary

While every choice is part of the Big Picture, not every choice has to be perfect. Fitness and health has to be a lifestyle, not some “diet” to blast through.

3. Results

In thirty days, I have lost just over ten pounds (one third of the way to my goal) and several inches from my waist, booty, and arms. I have leveled down to the next size of jeans in my closet. I feel tremendously more comfortable in my own skin already. And of note, I have not felt denied. During this 30 days, I have celebrated my birthday with a wonderful weekend in Philadelphia where I ate the likes of bacon wrapped dates, empanadas, crispy Cuban pork, and salted caramel cheesecake (all in one day, yikes!). Just know on that day I walked for close to 16000 steps all over the city and I locked her down that Monday and Tuesday, eating about 1250 calories each day.

 Bottom Line

♦Adequate levels of fitness take more than a casual stroll, but they also don’t require 90 minutes of marathon running and weight lifting. Don’t let the whispers of perfectionism immobilize you- “If you aren’t working hard, what’s the point of working at all?” Just move! An object in motion tends to stay in motion and it’s surprising what you can achieve if you just take that first step. I still miss the “high” from running, but my knee appreciates walking and the ten less pounds it has to haul around.

♦Accountability is key. My overachieving self can’t help but beat the 10000 step goal each and every day on my FItbit. Plus, since I can link up with my friends, THEY can see if I’m reaching my goals, too. Pride, in this case, works for me.

♦If you aren’t recording your food, you are most likely eating too much. As they say in Weight Watchers, if you bite it, you write it. I weigh or measure out every portion I eat.

Now go forth and move! The road to fitness can be walked!

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

It’s Your Move!

Did you know you can earn money with your Fitbit steps?! Find our all about it here!

5 Ways to Earn Money and Rewards with Your Fitbit! It's like getting paid to exercise! | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You can check out the Fitbit Zip I use on Amazon, too.

The Truth About 10000 Steps and Your Health| One woman's story of success walking the road to fitness.| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You can purchase my hula hoop here.

Hula Hoop

The above are Amazon Affiliate links. That means that while you pay the same as you otherwise would, we get a teeny portion of the profit. Maybe enough for a tablespoon of chia seeds.

Follow_us_on_Pinterest_pic

You can follow us on Google+, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Check out our books, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

 

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A Trio of Skinny Ground Beef Recipes with a Side of Podcast

Our question this week is how to flip the switch that will change your couch potato cake-gorging ways. We talk about Fitbits, food plans, and Ellen brings some hard core doctor advice.

What can help you flip your switch? Just hit play on the soundbar at the bottom of the post.

Now you were promised the recipe for stuffed pepper soup, but we’re going to give you even more. Here are THREE recipes you can make at the same time. If you’re browning one pound of ground meat, you might as well brown two and have dinner and lunches done for the whole week.

A Trio of Skinny Ground Beef Recipes: Skinny Stuffed Pepper Soup, Skinny Ground Beef with Greek Yogurt Sauce, and Skinny Mexican Casserole. Enjoy the yum without the calories. - Sisterhood of the Sensible MomsSkinny Stuffed Pepper Soup

Skinny Ground Beef with Greek Yogurt Sauce

Skinny Mexican Casserole

You can follow the links to the fully printable recipes, but here are Ellen’s tips for assembling the soup, Mexican casserole, and Greek beef at the same time.

When making these recipes all at once, Ellen typically uses one pound of extra lean ground beef and one pound of extra lean ground turkey.

She browns the turkey with the onions and peppers for the soup in her soup pot (because it cooks with very little fat draining off). She cooks the beef with the onion and the pepper for the Mexican casserole in a skillet. She drains both separately and removes her quarter cup of ground beef for the Beef with Greek Yogurt Sauce. but then returns half of the turkey to the skillet and half to the soup pot. She does the same for the beef, trying to get more of the peppers back in the soup pot.

She then proceeds with all three recipes. It’s a lot of cooking, but then you have dinners and lunches for days. So worth it.

Now these recipes weren’t the only resources mentioned. Another tool we talked about was this little guide that is so very useful for planning what you are going to eat when you go out:

The Calorie King Calorie, Fat & Carbohydrate Counter 2015: Pocket-Size Edition

 What will help you flip the healthy witch? This and other helathy recipes---Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

Now while you can easily get this awesomeness on Amazon for under $9.00, Ellen mentioned another book that is unfortunately out of print: The Skinny: How to Fit Into Your Little Black Dress Forever by Melissa Clark and Robin Aronson. So since you can’t easily buy this for yourself, we’ll share the two philosophies in it that first helped Ellen “flip her switch.”

1. Eat what you want and banish the guilt. If you really want a food, there is a portion and a way to work it into your day.

2. You can indeed eat a few bites of something decadent, like cake, enjoy each bite, and know that there will be bites of cake in your future. You don’t have to consume it all right now.

Keeping these two philosophies in mind are a great way to supplement a diet plan so that you can kick boredom, bingeing, and guilt to the curb . . . along with your fat pants.

By the way, we were raving about the positive reinforcement our Fitbits give us. We both have Zips. You can look at the details and buy one here:

Fitbit Zip Wireless Activity Tracker

Fitbit Love and A Trio of Skinny Ground Beef Recipes: Skinny Stuffed Pepper Soup, Skinny Ground Beef with Greek Yogurt Sauce, and Skinny Mexican Casserole. Enjoy the yum without the calories. - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Ooo,oooo! One more thing! We talked about being excited about BlogU. If you are looking for a great conference to take your Blog Beyond, check it out.

Thanks for Listening! And let us know what you think in the comments! How do you keep fit?

Erin and Ellen

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Check out what's new in our test lab of parenting--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

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A Gazillion Easy Steps To Finding Holiday Exercise Time

In addition to being sensible and funny, we really do try to be authentic around here. So after we wrote our post about keeping a time diary to find a magic hour to indulge in seek out stress relief, I did just that. I easily found my hour in the morning to get my exercise groove on, right after unloading the dishwasher and BEFORE being sucked into social media.

Let me share so that you too can make time to exercise, if that is your pathway to Holiday Zen like it is for me. Rest easy because finding the time is as easy as reciting the alphabet.

A Gazillion Easy Steps To Finding Holiday Exercise Time

A.  Wake up determined that THIS is the day you will jump back into the exercise rodeo ring due to a dream you had about your stomach paunch being bigger than Robert De Niro’s. (This is 100% true. How could I make this up? There may have been a couple or fifty cats in the dream too. Feel free to leave your dream analysis in the comments.)

B.  Ignore the box of mantle decorations that is STILL sitting in the middle of the family room. Maybe if you wait one more hour, elves will put them up. Vacuum up the tree needles, though, in preparation for your post-workout stretch.

C.  Turn the Facebook notifications off on your phone and lace up those shoes (after you spend 10 minutes looking for them.)

D.  Go down to the basement to unfold the “Easy Fold” treadmill.

E.  Attempt to unfold again.

F.  Complain about the situation on Facebook, but feel proud because you only spent 20 extra minutes online. Besides, you found this hilarious pair of pedicure booties. Totally worth it.

G.  Actually read the simple instructions on the label plastered at eye level on the treadmill.

H.  Attempt to unfold again.

I.  Kick the bejeezus out of the release bar because you’re pretty sure that is what the label implied for you to do.

Kick It Real Good Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

J.  Say forget it, you’ll just run outside because you like that better anyway.

K.  Step into garage and remember it’s 30 degrees out with ice and snow.

L.  Grab the rubber mallet instead.

M.  Return downstairs and repeatedly whack release bar until realizing  you have reached Handygal Level: Hypocrite. You would be all over your husband like cat hair on black pants for doing this.

N.  Thought passes through your mind that maybe all of these trips up and down the steps count as your foray back into exercise.

O.  Be strong and decide it would be quicker to use the clothes rack exercise bike in your bedroom instead since you have already used up your “magic hour.”

P.  Start a load of laundry from what was found on and around the bike. Fold the clothes in the dryer. Stupid elves ignored this job too.

Q.  Sit your fanny on the bike seat for 0.09 nanoseconds before the doorbell rings because the contractor is one hour early. WTH? Early?

R.  Trudge around with him outside.

S.  Feel re-energized by the sunshine and crisp air and resolve to beat the treadmill.

T.  Snatch a wrench from the garage and storm down the stairs with renewed purpose to confront your nemesis.

U.  Remove the @#$^*#& release bar and receive the full weight of the treadmill deck on your shoulders.

V.  Acknowledge that you will indeed need a bladder support surgery by your 5th decade as you ever so gently lower the deck to the floor.

W.  Realize you are starving because you had planned to exercise 2.5 hours ago.

X.  Run upstairs to grab a vegetarian breakfast sandwich with a cookie chaser because, hey, you’re  going to work out.

Y.  Decide to write a blog post while you eat because the world deserves to join you in your journey.

Z.  Return to the treadmill and attempt to turn on the TV, but there’s no signal. Spend minutes checking cables, but draw the line at calling DirectTV because dammit, you are going to run.

AA.  Chest bump your reflection in the full length mirror you regret installing because the alphabet cannot contain you.

AB.  Run! Rejoice that you avoid a face plant since you apparently forgot how to tie your shoelaces during your looooong break from running. Avoid celebrating with nachos.

AC.  Be kind to yourself for your 15:32 minute mile because dang it, you have remembered that running does indeed create your happy space. Savor your stretch on your needle-free carpet.

AD.  Realize that you don’t have time to shower before school pick-up, but try like hell to get those mantle decorations up. (Damn elves can’t be relied on for anything.) There is no way you and your glutes are managing a stepladder tomorrow.

AE.  Promise yourself you will only repeat Step AB – AC tomorrow . . . in less than 6 hours.

Tada! Magic hour easily found and realized!

As easy as saying your ABCs if you were doing it standing on your head with coyotes gnawing at your toes while manic clowns pelt you with water balloons.

What will you do with your “magic hour?”

-Ellen

 

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Does McFAD — Maternal Calendar Flippage Anxiety Disorder — Got You Down?

Do you have heart palpitations?

Sweaty palms?

A tight, strangled feeling in your throat?

Does the mention of “December” make you want to throat punch an elf?

Can you relate to this picture? Then read on! Calendar anxiety is real!

Well since naming a problem is 4/13 of the way to scoring medication, we have a diagnosis for you!

Maternal Calendar Flippage Anxiety Disorder or McFAD

Are you stressed? Do you forget things? Do you twitch when you have to flip your calendar? You might be suffering from McFad. Since naming a problem is 4/13 of the way to scoring medication, see if this is the diagnosis for you! #humor - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Ellen: Maybe I don’t speak for all mothers, but my family’s schedule stresses me out. And no more so than in December.

Erin: You are not alone, but I think you’re forgetting about May.

Ellen: Are you trying to send me over the edge? At least after you maneuver through May like an A.D.D. chipmunk on Wipe-Out, you have the glorious summer as a reward.

After December, you have ice . .  and darkness . . . and despair.

Erin: You’re more of a summer person, aren’t you? But I hear you. In addition to the normal homework/sports practices/club meetings/life, you get to add concerts, parades, parties, pageants, and decorating. And YOU have a December baby! Don’t forget about the epic sleepovers.

Ellen: Yeah, I was in danger of forgetting that (read in sarcasm font). My anxiety after flipping my calendar from November to December was nearly crippling. And to add to it all, my newly minted high school freshman has joined a club volleyball team. This means TRAVELING to TOURNAMENTS.

Erin: Isn’t “tournaments”  Latin for games that cost you lots of moolah and keep you hanging as to whether you are forfeiting one day of your weekend or two depending on whether your child’s team is victorious or crushed by defeat? Pretty much, it’s tears if you win and tears if you lose.

Ellen: I could not even open the email containing the schedule last night. My only defense was denial. I still haven’t opened the email, but while I was polishing my avoidance techniques (we all know I was just playing on Pinterest), I got a phone call reminder for my annual gyn exam. What kind of nut cone masochist schedules a routine exam in December??

Erin:  It doesn’t make it any easier that the fall sports are still on the menu as we start piling our plate full of winter sports. We now have to balance the high school soccer banquet in the midst of ferrying the crew to basketball practices. And just to make things really interesting, girl child is in a Christmas musical. And this is tech week. If you are fortunate enough to NOT know what that is, then go break a leg.

Ellen: Motherhood is not a pissing contest, but I suggest you put on your raincoat and galoshes now. I have my gyn exam on the same day that Coco (14) has an emergency practice for the winter concert that is scheduled over top of the travel volleyball team meeting which coincides with my youngest visiting shut-ins with the church youth group. The winter concert is the next day and it overrides swim team practice. I could go on but . . .

Got a handle on the symptoms yet? Don’t make us continue this rant disguised as an informational post any longer. Let’s discuss cure!

Wait for it . . .

Ellen: There is none! Aside from stranding yourself on an island like Tom Hanks in Castaways with only a volleyball to keep you company . . .

Erin: Isn’t volleyball a main source of your stress right now?

Ellen: Okay then. Back to “There is no cure!”

But there is treatment!

Ellen: Pretty much what works for the rest of motherhood too: wine, whine, chocolate, and carbs.

These are way too ambitious to be therapeutic, but look how cute and festive they are!

 

Erin: Well, we certainly have the whine down. This season is perfect for teetoalling all variety of sugar-y confections, so you have plenty of options for self-medication. Sugar cookies, hot chocolate, and cream puffs, oh my! You could be free lining powdered sugar with the best of them in no time . . 

Ellen: Free lining? It cracks me up when you try to go all street. Um, it’s either free basing or main lining.

Erin: Whatever you call it, it WILL help. Until you realize that now you can’t fit into your cute holiday party clothes and people have started mistaking you for Mrs. Claus. But there is still hope for you! Holiday music—the balm for the masses. And calorie-free. I hope. Because I have been overindulging in it since the drive home for Thanksgiving.

Ellen: Are you freakin’ kidding me?  When my kids were toddlers, I had the worst massage of my life because of Christmas carols. I was just cashing in a gift card that was about to expire at the end of December to try to get the lump of concrete worked out of my neck. I was trying to give myself the gift of a one hour break, only to be escorted into a treatment room where carols were blaring from the speakers. I politely asked the therapist to change the music because it was was spotlighting what I was hiding from — the shopping, the baking, the cleaning, the decorating, the Christmas carding. She did nothing but cut into my time to berate me about my bad attitude and to pontificate that I just needed to see the joy in the music. This was the first and only time in my life I have ever stiffed someone on a tip, but she got a schooling on the meaning of Grinch.

Erin: Four out seven of my family members agrees with you, but darn girl. Maybe you need some more exercise to work out that stress.

Ellen: Brilliant! Exercise always makes me feel better.

Erin: Hey, we could organize a 5K to raise awareness for McFAD. Donations could go directly to the wine and carb fund.

Ellen:  Hmmm, that doesn’t seem like a counterproductive loop at all. And more importantly, wouldn’t that just put one more thing on our calendars?

Erin: Good point.  

Addendum from Ellen: MY GYN CHASTISED ME FOR GAINING 10 POUNDS SINCE LAST YEAR.  I did just have  a surgical recovery spanning Halloween AND Thanksgiving where I was not cleared to exercise. Put that in your Santa pipe and smoke it.

 

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